In 2016, Louisville star Lamar Jackson became the first player from a state of Kentucky school to win the Heisman Trophy — and the first Heisman winner whose team lost to the University of Kentucky in the season he won the award. Julie JacobsonAssociated Press

In 2016, Louisville star Lamar Jackson became the first player from a state of Kentucky school to win the Heisman Trophy — and the first Heisman winner whose team lost to the University of Kentucky in the season he won the award. Julie JacobsonAssociated Press

Jackson’s honor also put a capper on the best year of major-college football in state of Kentucky history.

The current college football season is the first time that the commonwealth’s three Football Bowl Subdivision programs — Western Kentucky (10-3), Louisville (9-3) and Kentucky (7-5) — have all had winning seasons in the same year since WKU moved up to the FBS in 2008.

While each of UK, U of L and WKU have had better overall seasons than they had in 2016, our state has never enjoyed a better collective season from the three than the one we just lived through.

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The dual-threat excellence (1,538 yards and 21 touchdowns rushing; 3,390 yards and 30 TDs passing) of the 6-foot-3, 205-pound sophomore from Pompano Beach, Fla., allowed him to hold on to the Heisman even as Louisville lost its final two games.

For WKU backers, 2016 will define bittersweet. Western put up its second straight season of double-digit wins and claimed back-to-back Conference USA championships. Under head coach Jeff Brohm, Western Kentucky has won 28 of its past 34 games, along with two league titles and two bowl games.

Alas, Brohm’s track record led Purdue — flush with revenue from the Big Ten Network — to make the coach an offer he couldn’t refuse.

Kentucky began the 2016 season by blowing a 35-10 lead to lose to Southern Mississippi 44-35. The Cats then no-showed in a 45-7 loss at Florida. At 0-2, there probably wasn’t anyone outside Mark Stoops’ immediate family who believed the Wildcats would go on to produce a memorable season.

Kentucky's players celebrate the win over Louisville

Kentucky's players celebrated after a 41-38 victory against Louisville in the Governor's Cup matchup at Papa John's Cardinal Stadium.

Mark Cornelisonmcornelison@herald-leader.com

Johnson, a 6-3, 183-pound junior from Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., threw for 338 yards and three TDs and ran for a team-best 83 yards while committing only one turnover, an interception.

Jackson was brilliant for Louisville, running for 171 yards and two scores and throwing for 281 yards and two TDs. However, the U of L star turned the ball over four times, three interceptions and a game-deciding lost fumble.

That was a main reason 27-point underdog UK earned a 41-38 victory, the biggest upset in modern UK-U of L history.

It put the 2016 edition of Cats-Cards right there with — and arguably ahead of — 2007 (“Stevie got loose”) and 2000 (“The Lightning Game”) as the most memorable Governor’s Cup renewal ever.

Whether our state’s FBS programs can produce three happy endings to 2016 with bowl victories is far from certain.

Without the departed Brohm calling its offense, WKU faces Memphis (8-4) in the Boca Raton Bowl on Dec. 20.

When Louisville plays LSU (7-4) in the Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl on New Year’s Eve, U of L figures to be keenly motivated by its regular season-ending defeats to Houston and UK

In the Dec. 31 TaxSlayer Bowl, Kentucky drew a Georgia Tech (8-4) team that has won five of its past six games, including road wins at Virginia Tech and Georgia.

Still, whatever happens in the bowls, the 2016 season gave college football fans in Kentucky three winning FBS teams, a conference championship, an epic rivalry upset — and the Heisman Trophy winner.

Collectively speaking, college football fans in our state have never had it better.